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Among them are utilities, tech companies and business groups, clamoring to get a slice of the disaster aid pie.

Not surprisingly, the New York utility Consolidated Edison reported hitting the Hill to talk about “House and draft Senate bills for disaster tax relief with a focus on recovery from Superstorm Sandy.”

ConEd reported spending $256,000 on lobbying in the fourth quarter, including for non-Sandy issues like the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, dividend taxes and cybersecurity.

The NAACP lobbied for “provisions that ensure help to communities of color and low-income communities in the wake of Hurricane Sandy.”

The American Jewish Committee supported “FEMA funding for houses of worship on the same basis as other nonprofits under special circumstances of Sandy storm disaster relief,” as well as a Senate amendment to a Sandy bill sending typhoon damage relief funds to Palau that was ultimately shot down. The Jewish Federations of North America also sought funds for nonprofits and places of worship.

The National Cable & Telecommunications Association weighed in on “all provisions related to cable” in Sandy bills.

Verizon and AT&T took their telecommunications and appropriations concerns to the Hill. Cablevision also reported Sandy-related lobbying.

Others who reported lobbying on Sandy appropriations include JetBlue, Lockheed Martin, Home Depot and the Lorillard Tobacco Co.

Lobbying efforts aren’t confined to Capitol Hill.

The American Bar Association, for example, has been pushing for more funds for Sandy-afflicted states from the Legal Services Corp., a nonprofit corporation set up by Congress in 1974 to provide legal assistance to low-income Americans.